Ukraine Bank Roadmap: Blockchain-Based Payments by Q4 2017

Ukraine’s central bank has unveiled the roadmap for its Cashless Economy scheme, which will see it use the Blockchain as the basis for e-money transmission from 2017.

Also read: A Safe Guide for Bitcoin Travelers Visiting Ukraine

Blockchain Roadmap for Payments, State Registers

The plans, which run until the first quarter of 2018, were revealed by Konstantin Yarmolenko, an advisor to the head of the agency for E-government queries.

“The [National Bank of Ukraine (NBU)] Board has approved and presented a roadmap for Cashless Economy, which will use Blockchain technology in Ukraine for the first time,” Yarmolenko commented on his Facebook page.

“At the same time, the Ukraine E-Government agency is preparing some simply fantastic news relating to a pilot scheme for transfer of state registers to the Blockchain!”

Not Looking for a New Cryptocurrency

Ukraine has broadly accepted both Bitcoin and blockchain technology. This marks a contrast with confused and often contradictory treatment in neighboring Russia.

The initial push to incorporate Blockchain into NBU activities is slated to be ready by the fourth quarter of 2017. According to the roadmap, the bank then wishes to start acting as an emitter of electronic money. This, it says, will be attractive to the economy as this form of money makes acquisition cheaper and could even become an alternative to card payments.

However, the scheme’s proponents specified the goal is not to produce a decentralized cryptocurrency, but rather a digital form of hryvnia, Ukraine’s currency.

“The system will not be decentralized in terms of transaction verification,” a respondent clarified regarding a query as to whether the NBU would be the sole verifier and ‘miner’ of a potential new currency.

“It’s nice to see that the National Bank is on trend!” another comment read.

A Blockchain Arms Race?

In Ukraine, however, it is not just the NBU and central government interested in making blockchain technology pay. In the breakaway eastern region of the country, currently controlled by a de facto independent government, blockchain is also gaining popularity.

Specifically, authorities want to use the system as a way to circumvent the numerous blockades on traditional finance Ukraine and many other countries impose.

A special focus group, dubbed DAO Donbass, even held talks with ministers in September with a view to producing their own “roadmap to the integration of cryptocurrency into [the region’s] economics.”

What do you think about Ukraine’s latest plans? Let us know in the comments section below.

Images via Shutterstock

Do you want to vote on important Bitcoin issues? Bitcoin.com has acquired Bitcoinocracy, and rebranded the project to Vote.bitcoin.com. Users simply sign a statement with a non-empty Bitcoin address and express their opinions. The project focuses on determining truth backed by monetary value and transparency.

Virtual currency is not legal tender, is not backed by the government, and accounts and value balances are not subject to consumer protections. The information does not constitute investment advice or an offer to invest.